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Harrah's had been expected to price the offering Thursday and begin trading on the Nasdaq this week. The IPO, which Harrah's had said would raise as much as $531 million, would have helped ease the company's heavy debt load. Harrah's has nearly $20 billion in debt, and Francis Gaskins, president of IPOdesktop, estimates the company is spending as much as 22 percent of its revenue on interest payments. This would put interest payments at about $1.47 billion for the first nine months of the year. Harrah's, which plans to change its name to Caesars Entertainment Corp., owns or manages more than 50 casinos in 12 states and six countries. But it lacks a gambling presence in Asia, where casino operators are seeing strong growth, helped by resilient regional economies with an expanding middle class. "Macau is a bright spot for the industry and Singapore is off-the-charts robust, but it doesn't do Harrah's any good," said Eugene Martin Christiansen, CEO of consulting firm Christiansen Capital Advisors LLC.
Meanwhile, Atlantic City, where the company operates four casinos, has not yet shown signs of recovery. The expansion of gambling in the New York tri-state area and Philadelphia has increased the pressure on the New Jersey resort city, where Harrah's is the dominant player, said Chris Jones, an analyst with Telsey Advisory Group. And because of its strong presence in regional markets like St. Louis, Kansas City, Chicago and Mississippi, Harrah's needs "middle-America, salt-of-the-earth customers to start spending more
-- a large question mark in terms of the pace of the U.S. recovery," Jones said.
[Associated
Press;
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